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De Novo Discovery of Nonstandard Macrocyclic Peptides as Non-Competitive Inhibitors of the Zika Virus NS2B-NS3 Protease Christoph Nitsche, Toby Passioura, Paul Varava, Mithun Mahawaththa, Mila M. Leuthold, Christian D. Klein, Hiroaki Suga, and Gottfried Otting ACS Med. Chem. Lett., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acsmedchemlett.8b00535 • Publication Date (Web): 04 Jan 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 7, 2019
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ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters
De Novo Discovery of Nonstandard Macrocyclic Peptides as NonCompetitive Inhibitors of the Zika Virus NS2B-NS3 Protease Christoph Nitsche,1,#,* Toby Passioura,2,# Paul Varava,2 Mithun C. Mahawaththa,1 Mila M. Leuthold,3 Christian D. Klein,3 Hiroaki Suga,2,* and Gottfried Otting1 Research School of Chemistry, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia Department of Chemistry, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan 3 Medicinal Chemistry, Institute of Pharmacy and Molecular Biotechnology IPMB, Heidelberg University, Im Neuenheimer Feld 364, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany KEYWORDS: Flavivirus, macrocyclic peptides, protease inhibitors, non-canonical amino acids, display screening. 1 2
ABSTRACT: The Zika virus presents a major public health concern due to severe fetal neurological disorders associated with infections in pregnant women. In addition to vaccine development, the discovery of selective antiviral drugs is essential to combat future epidemic Zika virus outbreaks. The Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease, which performs replication-critical cleavages of the viral polyprotein, is a promising drug target. We report the first macrocyclic peptide-based inhibitors of the NS2B-NS3 protease, discovered de novo through in vitro display screening of a genetically reprogrammed library including non-canonical residues. Six compounds were selected, re-synthesized and isolated, all of which displayed affinities in the low nanomolar concentration range. Five compounds showed significant protease inhibition. Two of these were validated as hits with sub-micromolar inhibition constants and selectivity toward Zika over the related proteases from dengue and West Nile viruses. The compounds were characterized as non-competitive inhibitors, suggesting allosteric inhibition. In recent years, the Zika virus has emerged from a neglected member of the flavivirus genus to a health-threatening pathogen.1 Although most infections are asymptomatic, neurological complications such as the Guillain-Barré syndrome have been reported in a small proportion of patients. The link between severe disorders in fetuses (microcephaly) and Zika virus infections in pregnant woman prompted the WHO to declare Zika virus a Public Health Emergency of International Concern in 2016.1, 2 Since then, the virus has circulated in almost all Caribbean and Latin American countries, continental USA (e.g. Florida and Texas), Africa, Southeast Asia, and several Pacific islands with infections reported in 84 countries and territories around the globe. In contrast to other prominent examples of flaviviruses, such as dengue or West Nile, the Zika virus can be transmitted not only by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitos, but also through sexual contact.1, 2 About 30 potential Zika virus vaccines are currently being evaluated, out of which only four have entered phase 1 clinical trials.2 Particularly concerning for Zika (and dengue) virus vaccination campaigns are potential cross-reactions between Zika and dengue virus antibodies, where the resulting antibody-dependent enhancements can lead to increased viremia and severity of the disease, as observed previously for consecutive infections with different dengue virus serotypes.2 Therefore, alternative specific antiviral therapeutic options are needed for the treatment of symptomatic patients and infected pregnant women. Like other flaviviruses, Zika virus comprises a singlestranded positive sense RNA genome that encodes a viral polyprotein, which is post-translationally processed by host-
cell proteases and the viral NS2B-NS3 protease into three structural (C, prM/M, E) and seven non-structural proteins (NS1, NS2A, NS2B, NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5). The NS2BNS3 protease of flaviviruses is considered a promising antiviral drug target and several lead compounds have already been discovered for the corresponding dengue virus proteases.3 NS2B-NS3 is a serine protease, which consists of the N-terminal domain of NS3 and a short cofactor from the hydrophilic core sequence of NS2B. For in vitro screening campaigns, three different Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease (ZIKVpro) constructs have been proposed and crystallized. First, a construct with a covalent linker peptide between NS2B and NS3 (gZiPro) was adopted based on previous successful dengue and West Nile virus protease constructs.4 Two additional unlinked versions have been described, which are based on either NS2B/NS3 co-expression (bZiPro)5 or an autocleavage site in the linker peptide between NS2B and NS3 (eZiPro).6 The C-terminal tetrapeptide of NS2B in eZiPro was shown to interfere with access of substrate to the active site.6 Few ZIKVpro inhibitors have been described so far.7 The most effective ones are substrate-derived peptide analogs that bind covalently to the catalytically active serine residue (e.g. cn-716, Figure 2).4, 8, 9 However, due to conserved features in substrate recognition amongst serine proteases, these compounds display only poor selectivity between flaviviral and host proteases.8 Therefore, alternative non-active-site inhibitors that do not mimic the substrate or transition state may exhibit decreased off-target effects. Recently, natural products as well as compounds derived from previous West Nile virus screening campaigns have been reported to act as micromolar allosteric inhibitors of ZIKVpro.10, 11 In view of
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the limited coverage of chemical space offered by natural products and compound libraries, as well as common bias for promiscuous binders, we set out to identify completely new
structural scaffolds de novo by capitalizing on recent advances in mRNA display techniques. .
Figure 1. Design of macrocyclic peptide libraries for screening. The peptide libraries for screening were synthesized by genetically reprogrammed translation of a new mRNA library that was more focussed on hydrophobic residues than previous libraries. The codon table for the genetic code used is shown in (A) with Met replaced with N-chloroacetyl-tyrosine (ClAc-Y) for the initiation AUG codon or N-methyl-leucine (MeL) for all downstream AUG codons. B: Structures of the non-canonical amino acids used. C: The peptide libraries were synthesized by translation of a semi-random mRNA template comprised of an AUG start codon, 8-10 NNS codons (N = A, G, C or U; S = G or C), a UGC (Cys) codon, and a linker sequence for covalent linkage of each peptide and mRNA. Translation of this library under the genetic code shown leads to formation of a semi-randomized peptide library that cyclizes spontaneously to produce a macrocyclic peptide library. * Two libraries were synthesized, one initiated with ClAc-L-Y and one initiated with ClAc-D-Y.
Small (< 2 kDa) macrocyclic peptides are appealing starting points for such drug discovery. A key strength of macrocyclic peptides is that high-affinity ligands can be isolated for nearly any target rapidly using display screening approaches (phage display, mRNA display, etc.).12 Moreover, display screening can be combined with genetic code reprogramming techniques, allowing the screening of libraries incorporating structural characteristics such as backbone N-methylation and/or D-stereochemistry, which have been shown to improve biostability and membrane permeability, and therefore making the resulting hit compounds better starting points for drug discovery efforts than canonical peptides.12-14 In the present study, we have used such a screening approach (Random nonstandard Peptide Integrated Discovery, RaPID – Figure S1) to identify potent macrocyclic peptide ligands of ZIKVpro. These peptide ligands were specific non-competitive inhibitors for ZIKVpro, and several were found to display submicromolar inhibition constants (Ki). This study highlights the ability of such screening approaches to rapidly identify potent inhibitors of newly discovered targets such as those from emerging viral diseases. In order to identify novel inhibitors of ZIKVpro, we designed two macrocyclic peptide libraries for affinity screening by RaPID display. The libraries were constructed using a genetically reprogrammed in vitro translation approach and were designed to include five N-methyl residues (MeG, MeL, MeA, MeS, MeF) and the unnatural amino acid N-methyl-4O-methyl-tyrosine (MeYMe) (Figure 1, A and B). Each library was initiated with either L- or D-N-chloroacetyl tyrosine, in order to induce spontaneous macrocyclization following translation (Figure 1C).15 The genetic code was designed such that the non-canonical amino acids replaced Met (allowing for reprogramming of translation initiation) and all of the canonical residues except Lys which have charged side chains at neutral pH (i.e. Asp, Glu, and Arg). Additionally, the
random region of the peptide library was limited to a maximum of 10 codons, making the overall library both less charged and smaller than any previously reported comparable cyclic peptide libraries.12, 13, 16-21 The total theoretical diversity of both libraries combined exceeded 5 · 1013 macrocyclic peptides, making the total number of compounds screened several orders of magnitude greater than is typical using conventional high-throughput methods. Iterative affinity screening of these libraries against the linked ZIKVpro construct (gZiPro) immobilized on magnetic beads led to the identification of six families of macrocyclic peptide ligands (alignments of the 100 most frequent sequences from each library are shown in Figure S2). The most abundant member of each of these was synthesized by solid phase methodology omitting the C-terminal linker sequence (i.e. all residues C-terminal of the cyclizing cysteine). All six of these displayed high affinity for ZIKVpro with dissociation constants (KD) in the range of 5 – 168 nM as determined by surface plasmon resonance experiments (Table 1, Table S1, Figure S4). All of these compounds contain at least one unnatural modification in the peptide backbone and five out of six include the unnatural amino acid N-methyl-4-Omethyl-tyrosine (MeYMe), suggesting that these features are crucial for high affinity. The selected compounds were further analyzed with respect to their actual potential to inhibit the catalytic activity of the linked ZIKVpro construct (gZiPro) in a biochemical assay. All compounds except 5 showed significant inhibition of ZIKVpro substrate processing below a 100 μM cutoff (Table 1, Figure S5). Notably, 5 is the only analyzed peptide macrocycle that lacks the unnatural O-methyl-tyrosine side chain. Despite having no influence on catalytic activity, compound 5 binds to ZIKVpro with extraordinary affinity (KD = 5 nM), indicating a tight binding event that is likely to be distant from the
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ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters advantage of the presented affinity screening over substrate binding site without any impact on the structural conventional high-throughput screening methods for protease integrity of the catalytic center. Therefore, compound 5 linked inhibitors, which usually focus on inhibition only. to any reporter molecules (e.g. via a C-terminal amide bond) might have applications in selective probing of ZIKVpro without perturbing its activity. This exemplifies a major Table 1. Affinity and inhibitory activity of macrocyclic peptides against flaviviral proteases. ZIKV (bZiPro)e
DENVprof
WNVprog
KD / Md
IC50 / Me
IC50 / Mf
IC50 / Mg
ZIKV (gZiPro)b Cpd.
Sequencea
Ki / Mc (IC50 / M)
1
-S-Ac-YWKIMeYMeNTLVNIC-NH2
0.80 ± 0.08 (1.32 ± 0.03)
0.02
1.5 ± 0.1
>10
>10
2
-S-Ac-YMeYMeKMeFKMeSMeYMeKMeYMeMeYMeKC-NH2
0.44 ± 0.03 (0.62 ± 0.04)
0.009
0.25 ± 0.01
1.7 ± 0.1
3.9 ± 0.4
3
-S-Ac-YTNFYLYPYMeYMeFC-NH2
2.0 ± 0.2 (3.3 ± 0.2)
0.008
2.2 ± 0.1
>20
>20
4
-S-Ac-YMeGIAKYNMeYMeMeYMeIPC-NH2
20.4 ± 2.3 (16.5 ± 0.9)
0.009
4.6 ± 0.3
≥20
≥20
5
-S-Ac-YTLPFHNMeGTFFC-NH2
>100
0.005
≥50
>20
>20
6
-S-Ac-D-YAIIMeYMeYNKYMeLNC-NH2
3.5 ± 0.4 (7.1 ± 0.2)
0.168
3.2 ± 0.4
>20
>20
a The N-terminal thioether-acyl moiety (-S-Ac-) forms a macrocycle through the side chain of the underlined cysteine residue. MeY , NMe methyl-4-O-methyl-tyrosine; MeF, N-methyl-phenylalanine; MeS, N-methyl-serine; MeG, N-methyl-glycine; MeL, N-methyl-leucine; D-Y, Dtyrosine. b Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease (linked construct) C80S/C143S (1 nM). Substrate: Bz-Nle-Arg-Lys-Lys-AMC. c Inhibition constants (Ki) were calculated from measurements at four different substrate concentrations using a non-competitive inhibition model (nonlinear least-squares fits). Half maximal inhibitory concentrations (IC50) for a substrate concentration of 15 μM are reported in parenthesis. d Dissociation constants (KD) were determined by surface plasmon resonance using immobilized Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease (gZiPro). e Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease (unlinked construct; 0.5 nM). Substrate: Bz-Nle-Arg-Lys-Lys-AMC. Half maximal inhibitory concentrations (IC50) were calculated for a substrate concentration of 15 μM. f Dengue virus serotype 2 NS2B-NS3 protease (100 nM). Substrate: Abz-Nle-Lys-Arg-Arg-Ser-3-(NO2)Tyr. Half maximal inhibitory concentrations (IC50) were calculated for a substrate concentration of 50 μM. g West Nile virus NS2B-NS3 protease (150 nM). Substrate: Abz-Gly-Leu-Lys-Arg-Gly-Gly-3-(NO2)Tyr. Half maximal inhibitory concentrations (IC50) were calculated for a substrate concentration of 50 μM.
Figure 2. Chemical structures of synthesized hit compounds 1 and 2 that were identified as nanomolar non-competitive inhibitors of the Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease. Compound cn-716 is a previously published4 covalent active-site inhibitor of the Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease, which has been used in this study for comparison.
To exclude any construct-specific artifacts, we further assessed the activity of the unlinked ZIKVpro construct (bZiPro) in the presence of compounds 1-6 using the same biochemical assay. The IC50 values observed for gZiPro and bZiPro were mostly similar (Table 1, Figure S6), indicating that the linked (gZiPro) and unlinked (bZiPro) constructs are
equally suitable templates for drug discovery campaigns. Compounds 1 and 2 displayed the strongest inhibition of ZIKVpro with inhibition constants firmly in the nanomolar range (Table 1). These two macrocyclic peptides are structurally unrelated (Figure 2) and may therefore serve as independent starting points for further optimizations. In
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contrast to the previously reported ZIKVpro active-site inhibitor cn-716, which showed strong inhibition of thrombin (IC50 = 0.5 μM) and trypsin (IC50 = 0.05 μM),8 neither compound 1 nor 2 displayed thrombin or trypsin inhibition at the highest assayed concentrations of 25 μM and 50 μM, respectively (data not shown), highlighting their specificity towards ZIKVpro. Mechanistic studies with gZiPro at various substrate and inhibitor concentrations revealed a non-competitive inhibition mode for compounds 1–4 and 6, as evidenced both by nonlinear least-squares data fits (Table S3) and Cornish-Bowden plots. As an example, Figure 3A shows the Cornish-Bowden plot for the most active peptide 2, where the abscissa intersection point clearly indicates non-competitive binding.22 As expected for the non-competitive binding model, the degree of inhibition was independent of the substrate concentration, even at multiples of the Km value. Due to the size of substrate and macrocyclic inhibitor, both cannot occupy the active site simultaneously, suggesting that compounds 1–4 and 6 may act as allosteric antagonists of ZIKVpro activity. Allosteric inhibitors have been reported previously for dengue virus NS2B-NS3 proteases at different sites of NS3,23, 24 which may also act by perturbing the essential interactions between NS2B and NS3.25 The Ki values were all larger than the KD values determined by SPR (Table 1), suggesting induced conformational changes in the protease that affect catalysis to different degrees (in the most extreme case, compound 5 binds with high affinity but does not affect the catalytic rate at all). This observation is consistent with the hypothesis that the peptides might be allosteric inhibitors.
Figure 3. A: Cornish-Bowden plot for compound 2 and Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease (gZiPro). The intersection point (–Ki) of the four independent linear fits with the abscissa indicates a non-competitive inhibition mechanism with a Ki value of 0.44 μM.22 The same value was obtained from non-linear least-squares fits using a non-competitive binding model (Graphpad Prism 7.0; Table S3). B: Inhibition of Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease (bZiPro) activity by the non-competitive inhibitor 2 and the covalently binding active-site inhibitor cn-716. Addition of compound 2 in the presence of cn-716 results in synergistically decreased protease activity, suggesting that 2 binds at an allosteric site.
Although, in principle, resistance may easily evolve against allosteric inhibitors of viral proteases, such inhibitors can be valuable therapeutics in combination with substrate-derived active-site inhibitors. Established reverse transcriptase inhibitors for the treatment of chronic HIV infections are a prominent example.26 As drug-like active-site inhibitors of flaviviral proteases suffer from low affinity, their combination with allosteric antagonists is a promising route toward antiflaviviral therapeutics with adequate pharmacokinetic properties. To support the potential allosteric binding mode indicated by the non-competitive inhibition data, we performed the activity assay with bZiPro in the presence and absence of compound 2 and the covalent active-site inhibitor cn-716 (Figure 3B). As expected, the simultaneous presence of inhibitor 2 and cn-716 inhibited the ZIKVpro activity more strongly than the individual compounds at identical concentrations, indicating synergistic inhibition of ZIKVpro (Figure 3B). As cn-716 is known to occupy the active site by binding covalently to the active-site serine residue 135,4 this is strong evidence for compound 2 binding to a site distant from the substrate-binding site. Unfortunately, attempts to verify the allosteric binding mode by NMR spectroscopy or X-ray crystallography have failed to date because of the low solubility of the inhibitors. To further assess the specificity of the discovered inhibitors, we tested their performance with dengue and West Nile virus proteases (Table 1). Only compound 2 showed significant inhibition of both proteases in the low micromolar range with selectivity indices of 4 and 9 in favor of ZIKVpro over the dengue and West Nile virus proteases, respectively. Compounds 1 and 3 displayed selectivity indices greater than 10 in favor of ZIKVpro. Only compound 4 showed similarly weak inhibition constants around 20 μM for all three viral proteases. The selectivity of our new inhibitors toward ZIKVpro is in stark contrast to the broad cross-reactivity of previously described flaviviral protease inhibitors, which are predominantly active-site inhibitors.7 As the active center is highly conserved, selective targeting has been difficult in the past. Consequently, several compounds that were previously discovered as inhibitors of dengue and West Nile virus proteases have also been reported to inhibit ZIKVpro or even human serine proteases.7 The completely new structural motifs of the present study thus not only allow an increase in inhibition by non-competitive interactions but also selective probing of ZIKVpro. The most active compound 2 (Ki = 0.44 µM, KD = 0.009 µM; gZiPro) exhibits multiple non-canonical structural features. Half of all backbone nitrogen atoms of peptide 2 are methylated and it contains four unnatural O-methyl-tyrosine side chains, representing a chemical complexity that would require several optimization cycles underpinned by successful
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ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters structure-activity relationships if starting from a canonical peptide library. None of the selected screening hits showed evidence for competitive inhibition at the active site of the protease. This bias toward the enrichment of sequences that may target exosites rather than the active site of ZIKVpro suggests that active-site interactions of macrocycles were of significantly lower affinity during the screening (preventing enrichment of those sequences). This in turn may suggest low druggability of the active site of ZIKVpro (and closely related flaviviruses) by classical competitive inhibitors. This conclusion is supported by a previous study that aimed to identify high-affinity active site inhibitors in a library of substrate analogues, where interactions with key residues in the active site could be established but only an additional covalent bond with the catalytic serine residue yielded affinities in the nanomolar range (as in cn-716, Figure 2).4, 8 Alternatively, the absence of competitive inhibitors in the present work may be related to the deliberate exclusion of arginine (to avoid pharmacokinetic liabilities). All flaviviral proteases share the recognition of basic residues (arginine and lysine) in the non-prime substrate site with a particular preference for arginine in P1 and most peptide-based inhibitors address this recognition motif.3, 8, 9, 27-30 By excluding arginine from our screening library, we not only avoided an amino acid with a potentially negative impact on drug-likeness, but apparently also favored the selection of non-competitive inhibitors. Therefore, the observed bias may simply be attributed to the experimental set-up.
The two most active compounds from this screening campaign, 1 and 2, displayed no cytotoxic effects at concentrations up to 12.5 μM after 24 and 48 hours of incubation with Huh-7 cells (Figure 4). At higher concentrations cytotoxic effects became apparent only for compound 2. In summary, both macrocyclic peptides, 1 and 2, combine nanomolar dissociation and inhibition constants with unusual (non-competitive) inhibition mechanisms, excellent selectivity against human proteases, and low cytotoxicity. Our study demonstrates that display screenings offer an excellent way to rapidly generate selective probes and tool compounds that can modulate the enzymatic activity of the target protein from fully active (5) to highly inhibited (2). Future attempts will focus on further derivatizations of the identified and validated hits 1 and 2 to allow deeper insights into structureactivity relationships and facilitate in-cell studies and the generation of structural data by X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy. These studies will capitalize on chemical opportunities provided by the exocyclic C-termini of these compounds that can readily be tagged with reporter molecules or moieties that modulate solubility or cellular uptake without altering the macrocyclic peptide structure. In conclusion, we present the first macrocyclic peptide inhibitors of ZIKVpro identified through a RaPID screening technique that is orthogonal to conventional high-throughput approaches. With a single selection screen and no further optimizations, we identified unnatural peptides of remarkable affinity, inhibitory activity, and target selectivity. Most importantly, our results indicate that non-competitive inhibitors can be made that are highly active and may present excellent options for probes, tools and potential drug candidates in comparison to active-site inhibitors that have been unsuccessfully pursued for a very long time. Future work will assess whether a combination of competitive and noncompetitive inhibitors indeed offers a superior approach for the development of antiviral agents against Zika, dengue and related viral infectious diseases.
ASSOCIATED CONTENT Supporting Information The Supporting Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications website. Experimental details for Zika, dengue and West Nile virus protease constructs and preparation, synthesis and screening of macrocyclic peptide library, solid phase peptide synthesis, surface plasmon resonance, enzymatic protease assays (Zika, dengue, West Nile, thrombin, trypsin), cellular assays. Figure S1 (RaPID screening process), Figure S2 (alignment of peptide sequences), Figure S3 (MS data), Figure S4 (SPR binding curves), Figures S5 and S6 (dose-response curves), Figure S7 (Huh-7 cell viability data), Table S1 (SPR kinetic parameters), Table S2 (DNA oligonucleotide sequences), Table S3 (non-linear least-squares fitting parameters).
AUTHOR INFORMATION Figure 4. Effect of compounds 1 and 2 on the metabolic activity of Huh-7 cells (% reduction compared to non-treated). The dotted lines indicate an 80% cell-viability cut-off. Neither compound shows significant cytotoxic effects at concentrations up to 12.5 μM. A: 24 h incubation. B: 48 h incubation.
Corresponding Authors * E-mail:
[email protected] [email protected] Author Contributions # These
authors contributed equally. All authors have given approval to the final version of the manuscript.
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ORCID Christoph Nitsche: Toby Passioura: Mithun C. Mahawaththa: Mila M. Leuthold: Christian D. Klein: Hiroaki Suga: Gottfried Otting:
0000-0002-3704-2699 0000-0002-6089-5067 0000-0001-5171-6744 0000-0001-7698-2360 0000-0003-3522-9182 0000-0002-5298-9186 0000-0002-0563-0146
ACKNOWLEDGMENT C.N. thanks the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation for a Feodor Lynen Research Fellowship. Financial support by the Australian Research Council, including a Laureate Fellowship for G.O. is gratefully acknowledged. This work was also partially supported by CREST for Molecular Technologies, JST, and JSPS KAKENHI (16H06444 and 26220204) to H.S. We thank Mrs. Natascha Stefan for technical support.
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